Ten Little Celebrations – July 2017

A lot has happened this July…and it was easy to pick 10 little celebrations to highlight:

A successful first road trip. I finally got a road trip in my Prius Prime. I didn’t celebrate the blow out that happened on the original start to the trip (I did celebrate that the blow out did not cause an accident) but the trip that re-started the day after was so enjoyable that thoughts about by car turned positive again.

A morning walk at Mt. Pleasant Farm. I’ll get around to posting about this walk because it was so enjoyable: temperature perfect for hiking, a flock of gold finches bathing in a riffle of the Davis Branch, dragonflies everywhere, Monarch butterflies in the meadow, a ground hog ambling out of the path ahead of me, a riot of vegetation – including ripening blackberries. It was very much a celebration of summer.

Great Blue Heron interaction with a dragonfly. Sometimes being in the right place to witness the interaction of two very different organisms is a celebration. I could photograph this one. It was a juvenile Great Blue Heron it is seemed perplexed about what to do when the dragonfly perched while the heron was looking for lunch. Eventually the heron moved…the dragonfly moved. This went on for a few minutes before the dragonfly got the idea to find another place to land.

Summer camp photographers at Mt. Pleasant. I celebrated another group of 5-12 year old photographers that took excellent pictures. I have a post planned for early next week about the adventure from my perspective. One of the counselors commented that the campers seemed so engaged with the activity. There is something about having a camera in hand that is almost magic.

Milkweed bug instars. This time of year, I am always thrilled to find a plant with a lot of instars of milkweed bugs. It almost always happens in July. They start out very tiny and almost all red and go through several stages getting larger and larger and ending up as adults that are orange and black…and with wings!

Our street. I am celebrating that the street repaving in front of our house is complete…and it wasn’t too traumatic while the work was going on.

Melons. We are getting melons from our CSA – always worth celebrating so rare we have gotten sun jewel melons, cantaloupe and yellow watermelon. Hopefully we’ll get some red watermelons in August.

Then there were celebrations associated with volunteering a Brookside Gardens’ Wings of Fancy exhibit:

Butterfly laying an egg on my ring. OK – I’ll admit it was a very confused butterfly. But it was magical to have a butterfly become a part of my ring temporarily! I transferred the egg to the host plant afterward.

A 90-year-old birthday girl in Wings of Fancy. The lady was in a wheel chair but thoroughly enjoyed her family’s outing to the exhibit. Everyone that was in the conservatory celebrated with her!

Hummingbird moth at Brookside. I had been seeing the hummingbird moth on the walkway up to the ticket taker for the exhibit…and finally managed to get a picture. Celebration!

Out and About Close to Home

I took a late afternoon walk through our neighborhood recently. When I got to the pond, I didn’t see our resident green heron but there was a lot of bird noises. I thought maybe it was the birds finding good roosts for the night…then I saw the reason: a red-tailed hawk in the pine tree near the pond…surveying the place.

He was still for a few minutes then started looking around more…then flew away and the area got quieter almost immediately and I headed home.

As I walked up to our house, I noticed that the bush near our garage needed trimming. This would be the second time for this year. The next morning I went out to trim it – remembering to take the ‘before’ picture. It started out looking like a porcupine…then became a bush with a mohawk trim…

Then an asymmetrical bush. I cut some branches from the inside because I want it even shorter. The step stool I have that is easiest for me to carry around to trim bushes does not give me quite enough height to reach the top easily. Note that I used a lot of different tools: electric hedge trimmers, long handled pruners, and saw. I will do more with the pruners and saw to make the bush shorter!

Herons at the Neighborhood Pond

Our neighborhood pond is still an eyesore – cleaned out with a bulldozer in late spring, most of the vegetation gone, and covered with algae. But it is full of frogs which can sometimes be spotted if you hear plops as they move through the shallows. It’s made the pond a good place for a green heron which I have seen so frequently that it must be a near permanent resident. I always enjoy photographing green herons because they have so many ‘looks.’ Sometimes they look chunky and not much like a heron. Other times the feathers on top of their head stand almost straight up…a bird with a mohawk! Other times their neck elongates but looks very thick and strange for a heron. But sometimes they hold themselves in a pose that looks like most of the other herons (the very last image in the slide show below.

I spotted a Great Blue Heron in the pond last week. It doesn’t have adult plumage and the bill is two-toned so it probably is one that hatched this spring. It has a white spot under its eye which I noticed in several images; maybe that makes it unique. It found a meal near the pond drain but swallowed it before I could see what it was – maybe a frog…or a small fish.

Even though the pond has no visual appeal on its own, I like the birds that are there!

New Camera at the Pond

I got a new camera last October before the Festival of the Cranes; Canon came out with a new version already and my husband ordered it immediately – and Cannon Powershot SX730 HS. It has all the features of my previous ones (the 40x optical zoom, for example) plus a screen that is hinged so that it can be angled out from the camera. It will make it easier to take pictures with the camera held lower which is often a better angle for composition. It makes it easier to look through the bottom of my glasses and actually see the screen rather than pushing the glasses down my nose and not used them at all for the screen!

The other new feature that the camera has is Bluetooth pairing with my smart phone to get geo-tagging data (from the phone) in real time to add to the images. I’m still experimenting with it but I think it’s going to work well. I had an older camera that had GPS in the camera itself; since I turn my camera off and on a lot, the time it took the GPS to geo-locate made it almost useless. My phone is on all the time so the location information from it – transmitted via a Bluetooth pairing to the camera – should work better.

My first foray outdoors with the new camera was a short walk down to the neighborhood pond. It is still an eyesore covered with green algae and some trash visible around the margins. As we walked toward it, a red-winged blackbird was making a ruckus perched on a stick in the middle of the pond…then a bigger bird took its place.

Zooming in…I discovered it was a green heron!

It perused the pond then took a hunting stance.

And caught a frog!

A few seconds after gobbling down that meal, it swooped down low over the water and caught something…flew to far bank.

Another frog! The pond may have a huge crop of frogs this year because it has few fish and turtles (to eat the tadpoles)….the heron feasted.

Our Neighborhood Water Retention Pond – Update 1

I posted last week about the work to clean out our neighborhood water retention pond – about the muddy mess of the banks. Since then, straw has been placed over the mud. I noticed it when I was heading out to a day of volunteering for pre-school nature field trips. When I returned in mid-afternoon, it was raining. I stopped, rolled down the passenger side window, and took pictures of the pond.

Some of the straw has already started to sluff down into the pond from the slopes; the rain was too much for the straw to hold…and some of the soil was probably going down to the pond as well. If there had been seeds put down with the straw, many were probably also in the pond. Hopefully something will start growing on the slopes quickly. I noticed some birds on the far side of the pond -probably some ducks, I thought, based on their size and the way they were moving.

I used my camera to zoom in on the ducks and was surprised; they were wood ducks!

There were 4 males and 1 female. They seemed to be finding a lot of tidbits in the straw and around the edges of the pond in general. I wondered if they had been to our pond before but had not been visible because of all the dense vegetation. With the condition of the pond now – there is probably not a good place for them to nest in our neighborhood this year.

I was so pleased to see the wood ducks – but will be happier when the pond does not look like a muddy construction zone.

Our Neighborhood Water Retention Pond

The water retention pond that is supposed to slow down water run-off from our neighborhood was not working and there was flooding occurring with more frequency. Earth moving equipment was brought in by the country and turned a pond with lots of vegetation for wildlife around it (picture from last December)

Into a mud pit with very little vegetation around it. We had a day of heavy rain right after the vegetation was scraped away and the water than accumulated looks thick with silt and has already developed a green scum.

Here it is from a different angle. No one will be sitting on the bench enjoying the antics of red winged blackbirds in the cattails or frogs crocking in the pond anytime soon! One of the neighbors commented that she’d seen a large owl looking at the pond from one of the neighboring houses. It’s likely that it’s home was destroyed. Hopefully, the project will enable the pond to function as it should for water retention. The pond needs some grasses or other vegetation planted on the slopes or this clean out of the pond is going to be short lived.

The only positive thing I saw on my walk around the pond was a single solitary sandpiper. With the heavy vegetation that was around the pond previously, the bird would not have been visible even if it had visited.

On the back side of the pond there is milkweed coming up but the plants are on the edge of the area not previously mowed. Hopefully they will survive for the Monarch Butterflies this season.